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WNYLakeEffect

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  1. On 11/20/2022 at 12:20 AM, USCG RS said:

    Actually, I think that record goes to Copenhagen, NY; 2 Dec 1966: 12 inches in one hour. 

    It's on a long lost hard drive of mine, but years ago I found a newspaper (NYT iirc) clipping from c.1900 describing a freak snowfall of something like 8" in 20 minutes along the shoreline in Wayne or Oswego county. It snowed so heavily that people outside at the time ran to the nearest house/barn/etc to take cover for fear of suffocating. I posted it here probably 10+ years back, but I can't find that post.

    Anyway, I've been living vicariously through BuffaloWeather's posts. I miss LES.

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  2. 1 hour ago, BuffaloWeather said:

    No, its from WNYlakeeffect. He lived in Jamestown and put together maps of every LES event off Erie that is documented. Unfortunately Accuweather forums closed and they are no longer accessible. He posts here once in awhile and hope he has a storage of them somewhere. He graduated college and moved to NYC I believe. But every winter weather enthusiast in Buffalo needs to have this book on their bookshelves. It's unreal the storms that have hit this area. 

    @WNYLakeEffect

    Yeah, I haven't done anything in quite some time, but I still have all of the stuff saved at home. Some of the data (newspapers, COOP records) was either hard to find or process, but it's all out there. The Blizzard Book was a neat throwback -- many of the accounts of the storms it lists from before 1900 can be found on free(-ish) newspaper archives from the New York Times and Google.

    I based any of my maps from before the mid-90s entirely on COOP observations, which are inconsistent and geographically sparse, so they're very approximate. I'd do the maps differently nowadays. At the time, I overlaid multi-day totals on the map and tried my best to make contours that took into account the local tendencies and variations we experience. Later I attempted to create a mapping program in Python, but I was unsatisfied with the results (I needed to deal with way more data to make somewhat decent maps than my skills or time allowed, and it's really hard to make a program that considers local geography when plotting contours). It could absolutely be accomplished, though -- anyone that knows how to deal with masses of data, which can be pulled from databases in commonly used formats, could make a decent reconstruction of daily weather across the eastern US from 1893 to the present. I vaguely recall a product from some NOAA branch that sort of did this, but the execution wasn't exactly how I'd envisioned it. 

    Someday I'll revisit everything and do it my own way. 

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